Creative solution, but to do this, you should make sure the turntable has a built-in phono preamp (outputting at line level) On a conventional vinyl record, the high frequencies are recorded louder than the low frequencies according to the RIAA curve. So the the preamp section of a phono input on a mixer or amplifier not only brings the signal up to line level, but also applies RIAA correction - which is a form of eq - so you get a more linear & flat frequency response again. Without a proper phono preamp and by just increasing the volume, a record will therefore sound very thin, harsh and lack a lot of bass :)
Damn that logo splash is nice
Thanks mane 🙏
I like it when you ride that pitch fader🤠
Creative solution, but to do this, you should make sure the turntable has a built-in phono preamp (outputting at line level)
On a conventional vinyl record, the high frequencies are recorded louder than the low frequencies according to the RIAA curve.
So the the preamp section of a phono input on a mixer or amplifier not only brings the signal up to line level, but also applies RIAA correction - which is a form of eq - so you get a more linear & flat frequency response again.
Without a proper phono preamp and by just increasing the volume, a record will therefore sound very thin, harsh and lack a lot of bass :)
This is true, I believe my particular turntable has switchable phono and line level outs, so that's what I'm using. Cheers!